NO LU ME IV. SALISBURY, E LK LIC K POSTOPFIC oF | PA 6 owt). Star, , THURSD. AY, WITH SPAIN! PE Start But let us talk to you about our war ag: ainst high pr ices. ling News Indeed. Just see What "Uncle Samuel's” Cash Will Dol Avbuekle's 4 Ibs. Best Rice, 10 Ibs. Navy Beans, 7 Ibs. Lima Be: ns, 15 Ibs. White Hominy, rakes Coke Soap, 5 cakes Waterlily Soap, 9 lbs Good Raisins, 29¢. IC. 29¢. 3c. 2¢C. 29¢. 29¢. 18 Ibs. Granulated S Good Calico, Best Calico, Sugar, Lancaster Ginghams, dc. Good Cashmeres from 123 Very best Cotton Bats, 4 cents per yard. 0 cents per yard. and Enterprise Coffee, per pound only 10 cents. 1.00. per yard. cts. up. 10Gc¢. Good 7-ct. Muslin reduced to 5 cts. m=.) |] = RIECELV HCD my A fine line of Ladies’ Shirt Waists, prices from 50 cents to $1.00. Also a fine line of Men’s Dress Shirts, direct from the manufacturers, from 39 cents up. “nishing Goods. up. Overalls, ete., at prices away down. (HAT BARGAINS We carry an immense line of Shoes and buy direct from the celebra Walker and Douglas—thereby saving fully 25 per cent. part. We are also agents for the famous Carlisle and rifice to make room for our immense spring aid summer stock. CES | Call carly and save money. Children’s Tov of jobbers’ prices. Evitt Ladies’ Shoes. REMEMBER, THE? All the latest novelties in Neckwear and Gents’ Fur- Men's Suits from $4 up. Boys’ Knee Pants from 25 cents up. Suits from 75 cts. Men's W ofking Pants, Coats, =O FO Foy i 4 be y ted manufacturers—Rice & Hutchins, We warrant these shoes in every We are selling Shoes SE ARE at a CASH Sac- PRI- Barchus & Livengood, Salisbury, Pa. 1-3 OF YOUR LIFE SPT Then, Why Not Make [f Comfortable? NOTHIN (5 can induce good, healthful sleep quicker than one of our Enameled Steel Brass Trimmed Beds. We have a good one for h 6 en S3¢ 2 aS. Place on it a good Japanned Steel Spring, at ~aililm— © 2D HO), $3.5 and on this use one of our EUREKA FELT MAT- TRESSES, at pr 10.00), samc as aavertisead by OsterIooT Of NCW YOr'k for $isuo, ana you hyo bed on which no healthy person with a clear conscience can pass the night without a good refreshing sleep. DON'T THINK because the prices asked for these goods are small that they are “cheap : Tr.” GIV E THEM A TRIAL, and if they are not satisfactory in every respect, return them to us. Johnson & MccCulloh, SALISBURY. PENNA. 9 (3 8. A. Lichliter is doing businees at the old stand. With greatly increas- ed stock and facilities for handling goods, we are prepared to meet the wants of our customers in ALL KINDS OF STAPLE GROCERIES, Feed, Flour, Corn, Oats, Ite. In short anything to feed man or beast. OF CARBON OIL and can save merchants money on this line, as we buy car- load lots. We are also Headquarters For Maple Sweets. We pay cash for good Butter and nice, clean Fresh Eggs. what advantages we offer. S. A. LICHLITER, Salisbury, Pa. Come and see alin Hlour and Heed! Fuarthermore, we are JOBBERS | A TABLE SHOWING A REDUGTION OF TRIES. They Are Now Less Than Ten Years Ago. RE WILL BE NO INCREASE THIS YEAR. TH | | )| The Law Compelled an Increase of | Valuation, but the Millage will be Reduced. { To the Taxables of Somerset County: — W hereas a loud been made through county press under the l old Quay-Scull faction against the ad- outery has that part of the [ed into permanent retirement and a litage to remain a her- This is the public obliquy that shall their children. | Seull theory upon which the hypothesis {of eternal Scull supremacy is based; * lof which the great nebular hypothesis | is but a feeble imitation; and compar- ed with whieh the theory of Coperni- cus becomes ed unintelligible absurdity. O yes! the Scull theory ds very plain. that the wayfaring man, though a fool, (especialy a fool), can understand—and scuil of the Seullions afloat ;—necessary {to keep the Scullpaper, in fact, alive. A political machine is necessary to ab- i lately | wreck—wrecked by “Timotheus”, control of the | lawkward stoker. the Republican organ- | ministration of the public business in! the County Commissioners’ oflice, whereas the undersigned have been | solute monarchy—absolute as far as it feounty taxes? | been systematically coming down ever | since the =cull [ of the Commissioners’ office. | the sense in crying out against increas- | These { erset, Pa. an abstruse conglomerat- | So plain | | fute all they have said in the past five | | years. obey. It ismotonlyaplain,but also n nec- | essary theory ;—necessary to keep the! M. ARCH 04, 1898. NUMBER 9 penses of the county has continued up to the present day, and was the univer- sal practice prior to 1891, with the ex- ception of the issuing of bonds th 1888 to raise money for the construction of the new county jail. Here is where the great luminaries of the Scull ring based one of their criticisms. They do not allege that these temporary loans are fraudulent, but with the gravity of owls, and with red-headed obstinacy, they howl and scribble “It is, it is— illegal!” The Scull board of County Auditors has surcharged all the inter- est that has been paid on the money borrowed in the years 1896 and 1897. The County Commissioners appealed from the surcharge of 1896, and they have made every exertion to bring the case before court for trial, but Mr. Biesecker, attorney for the County Aud- itors, has thus far defeated their every effort. A. L. G. Hay, Esq. attorney for the present board of County Com- missioners, whose duty it is to press the surcharges for trial before tht court, said that Mr. Biesecker has so far ob- structed every move made by the pres- ent board of Commissioners to get the case to trial. TAXATION REDUCED. Now let us turn to the senseless howl of these newspaporial scandal mongers about raised valuation and increased taxation. In this work the Ring news- | | papers are ably “supplemented” by a | large reinforcement of Ring tools all {over the county. The impression has | | been made that taxes have been raised and that the “swelling valuations” means great extravagance in county nisbursements for the future. We refer { again to the record. We will give the | total amounts of county taxes levied [for the past thirteen years, commenc- ing with the year 1895, so that there | { cannot be the least suspicion of unfair- | Ness: Mills. | Year. Levied. { 1885. ... { 1886. ...6 11837... 1 1888.... FIS8Y.. { 1890... F189]... . L1892. 8 1893. ik 11894....5 1895... i . 1596 47,072.10 1897 48,567.28 Pray, where is He great increase in County taxation Total (lo. Total Co. Valuation. Tax. $6,665,543. . . . .. $53,308.23 | 9,051,867 54,311.27 | 8,035,041 53,615.70 8,997,813 62,984.78 | Si 471 60,952.31 H525138.15 | 52,886.75 45,355.56 | 45.419.70 | 45,716.66 48,438.13 9,071, He 9.083.010 pe has | Ringsters lost control Where is taxation and swelled valuation? figures ‘are easily accessible. | Any tax-payer can verify them by call- ing at the Commissioners’ office, Som- The cry of swelled valuation is an equally monstrous lie—monstrous | because the slightest investigation by the editors of the Ring organ would re- ed The present Board of County Commissioners will not require more | taxes for 1898 than were levied for 1897. { Why should they? The County’s | sets are $10,000 in excess of all its lia- | bilities. The bonded indebtedness has been reduced to $4,500. as- goes, for all it is worth—but the old! Scull its engineer, and “Fred” Their last fatal act new chief wus to declare I. . . - . - | and | ization a bankrupt institution, with the pretending County Chairman a mere | pointed out as a special object of their | | receiver, appointed by Judge Barker. | vociferous calumnies; we, | feel called upon to publicly answer the | from orion of those new-fledged reform- This answer may seem tardy in its l appearance, but its tardiness must be justified in the flimsiness and down- I right foolishness of the charges prefer- ‘red by the silly authors of the afore- {said eriticism. For an answer to all their allegations we steadfastly relied upon the record we have made as pub- lic officers. A public officer must in: | evitably stand or fall by the record he ‘makes while he occupies the oflice. | Truly, “a pubiic office is a public trust.” ' But we must not dwell on generalities. eral—all general. There is not one ! specific wrong or fraud that these scrib- bling scorpions allege. There sole aim and object seems to be one of general denunciation and vituperation. The | great end and purpose of all their froth- ing and frantic vaporing is transparent enough. Men who will not de their every bidding must be erushed. Public officers who will not administer the ; public business in the sole interest of ‘the Scull ring must be broken down. | County Commissioners who refuse to make the Herald office the sole middle- | ‘man for the- furnishing of the public supplies—at the most exorbitant prices { —must be maligned, ridiculed and per- | | | The charges against us are indeed gen- | therefore, But the Republican party will recover this untoward circumstance in due time; the Scull ring never. TEMPORAY LOANS. of the before It As for our administration Commissioners’ office, as we stated, we.appeal to the record. would be impossible to speak otherwise | of our own oflicial acts. upon our duties on the first Monday of | empty | treasury and a bonded indebtedness of January, 1891. We found an $13,500 upon . the county. The jail built the year before required a new roof immediately, owing to the bad architecture in its construction. Money was indispensable to meet the current demands upon the treasury, and we ! borrowed money in the same way that other corporations borrow money for temporary use. Our predecessors had just a few days before the expiration of their term of office, called in and paid $5,600 in bonds that did not fall due | before the next year. In the English language of the late lamented County Auditors, we thought it would be *far- ‘eial” to go through the legal prelimin- aries and extra expense required forthe issue of new bonds, and our attorney, H. 8. Eadsley, Esq., advised us that such a temporary loan without the for- ! ality of issuing bonds was not illegal. | This method of borrowing money, for | secuted into meek submission, or rele- temporary use, to meet the current ex- political machine is now a total | the | We entered | ITEMIZING, | The Scull printers seem to be adepts at one-side itemizing, and a little con- | tinuation thereof may interest taxpay- 'ers. : When we entered the Commissioners’ | office the ruling prices (established by | the Sculls who had their hand on the public throat) for the most important public supplies and advertising were as | follows: Assessment books and blot- | ters, per set; $150 {present price 385); | tax duplicates, per set, $70, (present | price $15); registration books, per set, | $120 (present price $20); election blanks, | | per set, $98 (present price $30); mili- tary rolls, per set, $53 (present price $13); advertising anpual statement, | $170 (present price $75). Other sup- plies and printing in nearly the same proportion compared with the old | Ilerald prices. “POLITICAL REBATES.” The mendacity of these new-born | “Reformers” seems to have reached its | climax in allegation that we have issa- ed tax rebates by way of political fa- vors. No greater falsehood was ever uttered. We issued tax rebates just as our predecessors issued them, in cases | only of the most glaring hardships and | inequalities, and never without the | | knowledge and advice of the proper | | tow nship or borough assessors. These | rebates are also matters of record and we challenge the “Reformers” to prove | | BRIDGE CONTRACTS. On the matter of awarding contraets for building iron bridges our practice has also been criticised. We have con- tracted for iron bridges privately when- ever we found private lettings the most | you will assess and value i the rate or price which you shall, after | due examination and consideration, be- | The Act of | rately bona fide i carefully | shall be lawful for said conimissioners a single “political rebate.” E * profitable to the county. Public let- tings have not proved so advantageous as private lettings, because oridge men always pool their interests at a public letting, just like some newspaper edi- tors “pool” on county printing, and the successful bidder must divide profits with his competitors. A bill intro- duced at the last session of the Penn- sylvania legislature, providing that all contracts for bridge work should -be awarded to the lowest public bidders, was condemned by nearly all the boards of County Commissioners in the State, and the bill was subsequently with- drawn by its author. In contracting for iron bridge work we have succeeded in buying bridges more than one-third cheaper than iron bridges have ever been contracted for in the history of Somerset county. This reflects no dis- credit upon our predecessors, because the decline in the price of steel and iron has made iron bridge ‘work corre- spondingly cheaper now than ever be- fore. THAT FIVE-YEAR “INVESTIGATION.” The new “Reformers” have freely suggested an investigation of the bus- iness transactions of the Commission- ers’ office covering a period of the last five years. We cheerfully invite this investigation—not for a period of the | past five "years only, but for the full seven years covering our combined terms of service in the County Com- missioners’ office, and we hereby waive all legal registrations that might limit the investigation to five years only. Let the investigation proceed at once, and for seven years! Keep Biesecker and all the other Scull crew off the “brakes” and turn on the steam! All we shall ask is permission ta ride on the “cow-eatcher,” that the “headlight may not he neglected. S =U, Geo. If. SHoprg, Kivyer, : » NO INCREASE OF TAXES. Commissioners Give all Necessary Assurance on this Poin.. To the Taxables of Somerset County :— »> x * The form of oath required toe be ad- ministered to assessors (see Aet of 27th July 1842 Pamphlet Laws, 441 §9) is as “You do swear * % that at follows: Roe lieve the same would sell for, if sold singly and separately at a bona fide sale, after due public notice; * #3 15th May 1841, P. L. 395 §4. provides that “it shall be the duty of | assessors to assess, rate, and value all objects of taxation according to the act- tual value thereof, and at such rates and prices for which the same would sepa- sell. And on the re- or valuation turn of such assessment | into the office of the County Commis- after the same shall have been examined and corrected, it sioners, if they believe any property made tax- able has been assessed below its actual value to raise the same to the actual value thereof, or if the same has been assessed above its actual value, to re- duce tho same thereto.” To which duties the eounty commis- | sioners are especially sworn as a board oT - of revision by oath under the act ot July, 1804, P. 1. 441 (10. If after the appe:l: have been all heard it is found that the total valua- tion is higher than last year, the mil- | Inge will be correspondingly reduced. | The total county tax for the .year 1897 | was $48,567.28, and there is no neces ty for more in 1898, and more will not be levied. Under the law, as quoted above, the assessors were bound to ssi | raise valuations in many instances, but we purpose to adjust this increase, il any, by a reduction of the millage, si thy the taxes levied will not be higher "than last year. Where valuations were advaneed by the Commissioners in any distriet, and taxables who attended the appeals were allowed a reduction after showing the valuations to be generally too high, a like reduction will be allowed all taxa- bles in that district, whether they at- tended the appeals or not. The impression created, by certain | persons with an unworthy motive, that { the county taxes are to be increased is false. There is no necessity for an in- crease of taxes and there will be no in- crease, and it was never intended there should be. GABRIEL GGOD, Geo. KF. KinxeL, Co. Commissioners. $ We are anxions to do a little good in this world and can think of no pleasanter or better way to do it than by recommending One Minute Congh Cure as a preventive of pheumoaia, consumption and other serious lung troubles that follow neglected colds. P. 8. Hay, Elk Lick. C. A. Bender & Bro, Grantsville.